Except for one minor provision, the
Supreme Court on June 28th upheld President
Obama’s signature Affordable Care Act (ACA), as Linda Greenhouse had predicted,
with Chief Justice Roberts writing the opinion of the court and providing the
swing 5-4 vote. But Roberts’ opinion is
so convoluted that both CNN and Fox initially reported that ACA had been ruled
unconstitutional.
Most of the case concerned the
constitutionality of the Act’s individual mandate that will require most people
lacking health care insurance to pay a penalty added to their federal taxes and
collected by the Internal Revenue Service.
Roberts’ opinion, part of which represents the opinion of the Court and
part his own (minority) opinion, starts off by denying that the mandate is
justified by the Commerce Clause of the Constitution since not buying insurance
is not “commerce”—and shouldn’t be because then Congress could require everyone
to buy broccoli to improve their health.
The opinion then goes on to deny that the individual mandate is
justified by the Constitution’s Necessary and Proper Clause since even if it’s a
“necessary” part of the ACA, it is not a “proper” one.
Finally, after 30 tedious pages during
which he apparently exceeded the attention span of CNN and Fox, Roberts gets
around to Congress’ power under the Constitution to “lay and collect Taxes.” On page 44, he concludes (for the Court) that
what the ACA describes as a “penalty” is really a tax and within Congress’
power to enact and is therefore constitutional.
But previously, on page 15, while again writing for the Court, Roberts
dismisses the federal Anti-Injunction Act, which forbids lawsuits like this one
“for the purpose of restraining the assessment or collection of any tax,” on
the grounds that the penalty is really a “penalty” and not a “tax.”
Justice Ginsburg, whose opinion follows
that of the Chief Justice, argues that all parts of the ACA are constitutional as
written, particularly under the Commerce Clause.
The
provision of health care is today a concern of national dimension, just as the
provision of old-age and survivors’ benefits was in the 1930’s. In the Social Security Act, Congress
installed a federal system to provide monthly benefits to retired wage earners
and, eventually, to their survivors.
Beyond question, Congress could have adopted a similar scheme for health
care. Congress chose, instead, to
preserve a central role for private insurers and state governments. According to the Chief Justice, the Commerce
Clause does not permit that preservation.
This rigid reading of the Clause makes scant sense and is stunningly
retrogressive.
Roberts’ “crabbed reading of the
Commerce Clause,” writes Ginsburg, “should not have staying power.” I believe there are good reasons why it
won’t. Roberts’ many pages describing
what portions of the Constitution do not
support the ACA’s individual mandate are actually irrelevant to the Court’s
holding that the mandate is supported
by the taxing power. As such they’re
considered (in legal lingo) “dicta” which, unlike the Court’s holdings, do not
represent precedents for subsequent decisions.
Furthermore, the Commerce Clause is
too important to the Constitution and US history to suffer a crabbed
interpretation. The federal government’s
supremacy in interstate commerce was arguably the founders’ number one priority
in establishing the Constitution to replace the Articles of Confederation and
is arguably the number one reason why in early in the 20th century the
US became the economic powerhouse of the world.
Europeans have recently tried to create the economic equivalent of the
US market with their Common Market. The
Common Market’s flaw, as we see today, is the lack of a single, strong government
to regulate it.
The only other opinion in the ACA case
except for a short solo dissent by Justice Thomas is a bizarre joint dissent signed
by Justices Scalia, Kennedy, Thomas and Alito asserting that the ACA is entirely
unconstitutional. It’s as if the opinion
of four of the Court’s five conservative choirboys was designed to be a
majority per curiam opinion, an
anonymously written opinion “by the court.”
While it would have been a scandalous
departure from Supreme Court practice if a 5-4 opinion striking down the landmark
ACA had been written per curiam, that
may have been exactly what the four anticipated when their opinion was written. In a follow-up column, Linda Greenhouse suggests
that Roberts’ vote affirming ACA may have been a last-minute
switch that left his four conservative colleagues in the minority. Minority dissents are by definition not by the court, so without Roberts’
support what may have been intended as an anonymously written majority opinion
became an anonymously written minority opinion.
In the end, the Supreme Court’s validation
of the most significant piece of social legislation since Medicare and Medicaid
ultimately depended on a halting, awkward and inconsistent opinion of the Chief
Justice that eventually found its way to a place in the Constitution that
sheltered the individual mandate and saved the Act. Although the opinion did not persuade any of
his fellow-conservatives, not even the supposed swing-voter Justice Kennedy, Roberts
has received praise for a courageous vote. I’m not persuaded that he deserves it. After donning the mask of someone who
respects legal precedent and tradition for his Senate confirmation hearings, he
led a coalition of five of the nine justices that ravaged the judicial
landscape and in its most notable case destroyed a century of campaign finance
reform. Its clownish behavior at several
days of argument for and against the ACA changed public expectation that the
Court would surely uphold the Act to one of expectation that it well might not.
And who knows? Perhaps that’s where it was going, but
Roberts changed his vote. Perhaps he worried
about his place in history. Since Bush
v. Gore, when the candidate with the majority of the people’s votes lost the
Presidency by one vote on the Supreme Court, the public has soured on the Court
that it once respected, and Roberts has done nothing to restore that
respect. Until June 28th,
maybe. We’ll see.